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UNICORE

Unicore
Designer Microprocessor Research and Development Center
Bits 32-bit
Introduced 1999
Design RISC
Encoding Fixed
Branching Condition code
Endianness Little
Page size 4 KiB
Registers
General purpose 31
Floating point 32

Unicore is the name of a computer instruction set architecture designed by Microprocessor Research and Development Center (MPRC) of Peking University in the PRC. The computer built on this architecture is called the Unity-863. The CPU is integrated into a fully functional SoC to make a PC-like system.

The processor is very similar to the ARM architecture, but uses a different instruction set.

It is supported by the Linux kernel as of version 2.6.39.

The instructions are almost identical to the standard ARM formats, except that conditional execution has been removed, and the bits reassigned to expand all the register specifiers to 5 bits. Likewise, the immediate format is 9 bits rotated by a 5-bit amount (rather than 8 bit rotated by 4), the load/store offset sizes are 14 bits for byte/word and 10 bits for signed byte or half-word. Conditional moves are provided by encoding the condition in the (unused by ARM) second source register field Rn for MOV and MVN instructions.

The meaning of various flag bits (such as S=1 enables setting the condition codes) is identical to the ARM instruction set. The load/store multiple instruction can only access half of the register set, depending on the H bit. If H=0, the 16 bits indicate R0–R15; if H=1, R16–R31.


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